See the little round pad on the right side of the screen? Works more or less like the mouse on a Thinkpad.
Left/right mousebuttons are on the flip side of the screen (think 'thumb on the pad, index finger on the buttons')
With regard to speed, it's a 166 MHz Pentium. It runs Windows 2000 just fine (with 64 MB RAM), as long as you don't need to run a SETI or RC5 client (who'd do that on a laptop, anyway?).
% host -t soa . | head -1 . start of authority A.ROOT-SERVERS.NET nstld.verisign-grs.com( % whois verisign-grs.com (...) Registrant: Network Solutions, Inc. (VERISIGN-GRS2-DOM) 505 Huntmar Park Drive Herndon, VA 20170 US
You need to try out nvi. Yes, SVR4 vi sucks. nvi doesn't, it's a "bug-for-bug compatible replacement for the original 4BSD vi",
meaning you get the exact behaviour of a traditional BSD vi, but the sources are unencumbered.
I'm not going to comment on vim or the other vi-lookalikes, it'd probably end in a small flame-war.
Hello, hi.
-bwulf
(link in Danish. Product #2.
...now strip down and get on the probulator!"
-Capt. Leela
Except, of course, she didn't become a captain until the end of episode 1ACV01.
What are we supposed to believe this some kind
of, ahem, magic ranking system?
Can do.
On my Nokia D211 (GPRS cardphone), the time between the 'ATDT*99#' and the PPP-session is established is negligible (using pppd).
In Windows, connect-times vary. I blame this on general DUN suckage, though.
That would be an ObSimpsonsQuote..
Maybe you should try clicking on some of the links in the article with pictures next time?
Left/right mousebuttons are on the flip side of the screen (think 'thumb on the pad, index finger on the buttons')
With regard to speed, it's a 166 MHz Pentium. It runs Windows 2000 just fine (with 64 MB RAM), as long as you don't need to run a SETI or RC5 client (who'd do that on a laptop, anyway?).
The full specs are here.
Fits in the pocket of my coat, is loaded with 20GB of Futurama MPEGs, music etc., GSM/GPRS connectivity for VPN/SSH etc..
It's sweet.
Yes, works flawlessly (with linux_base 7.x).
FWIW, Windows 2000 runs fine on my Pentium 166, 64 MB RAM. Don't know about XP, that bloated sack of ..
You do of course realize there's an option to set your timezone? As for Slashdot running in GMT; the default seems to be EST.
Posted by timothy on 0:59 Monday 01 April 2002
You know, that's not such a bad idea..
% host -t soa . | head -1
. start of authority A.ROOT-SERVERS.NET nstld.verisign-grs.com(
% whois verisign-grs.com
(...)
Registrant:
Network Solutions, Inc. (VERISIGN-GRS2-DOM)
505 Huntmar Park Drive
Herndon, VA 20170
US
Sorry, doesn't work that way.
See http://www.faqs.org/faqs/usenet/legends/godwin/.
.. has a fine client, which includes a file-transfer function.
I use it every day to transfer files from/to home and work.
It does some of the things you mention; easy UI, remote renaming, recursive directory transfers, drag and drop and some other bits.
... water found to be wet[1], sky found to be blue, Earth found to be round[2] and CNN found to be obvious.
[1] at certain temperatures
[2] well, almost
Sure about that? I've been doing
pass out (...) from (my network) to any keep state
and
pass in (...) from any to (a host) port (number) keep state
for ages with IPF. Or am I not reading you right?
But much older, at least as old as 1993 (speaking of the original version here)
The original: http://www.sgi.com/fun/freeware/3d_navigator.html
The re-implementation: http://fsv.sourceforge.net/
I really should get to try out the SGI version some time, though it claims to run on 5.3 and less only.
No it isn't.
ObMLP: http://leech.dk/tux.jpg
Official release-date is Jan 26th, as can be seen here.
Slashdot jumped the gun, again.
You could try watching newvers.sh in CVS for a 4.5-RELEASE tag, or at least check the FTP sites.
4.5 is still in Release Candidate 3, as far as I know.
Keep an eye on the freebsd-announce list or the news page.
You need to try out nvi. Yes, SVR4 vi sucks. nvi doesn't, it's a "bug-for-bug compatible replacement for the original 4BSD vi",
meaning you get the exact behaviour of a traditional BSD vi, but the sources are unencumbered.
I'm not going to comment on vim or the other vi-lookalikes, it'd probably end in a small flame-war.